

Others hypothesized that the band was referring to the Camarillo State Mental Hospital in Ventura County. This would make the Eagles vent about the hospitality industry. Some believed that the “Hotel California” was a real hotel in Baja California near Santa Barbara. This has lead to it becoming the victim of several misinterpretations by both critics and fans alike. The first thing we need to do is to admit the cryptic nature of the song’s lyrics. Many guests have experienced strange breezes, flickering lights, and phantom footsteps believed to be evidence of the young woman’s unrest.As one of the most well-known songs of the rock era, and the 49th greatest song of all time according to Rolling Stone magazine, chances are you’ve heard the famous song “Hotel California” by the Eagles from 1977 – unless you’ve been living under a rock. In 1892, 24-year-old Kate Morgan checked into this luxurious waterfront resort alone and then ended her life on the hotel’s staircase. A spirit of a former prisoner reportedly haunts the wine cellar, converted from a cell. Go for the chips and guacamole stay for the headless friar sometimes seen at the restaurant’s door! This Mexican eatery sits atop the town’s old jail. Visitors can choose from a handful of haunted tours, or book a stay in Stateroom B340 for overnight thrills. (Note: The Queen Mary has suspended tours and stays until at least 2022, but you can still behold the massive ocean liner from the Long Beach’s Shoreline Village.)Įl Adobe de Capistrano, San Juan Capistrano Once known as the “Grey Ghost,” the Queen Mary serves up chills in the form of screams from a decapitated sailor in the boiler room and visions of a lady in white roaming the halls. Guests have also reported mysterious trumpet music believed to be the spirit of Montgomery Clift who liked to practice in suite 928. It’s said that Marilyn Monroe herself still haunts the halls. Stay at this swanky hotel for a chance to glimpse one of the most glamorous ghosts of all time. Moonlight tours are available for the brave and the curious. Perhaps it’s the original keeper who some believe still visits the site in his original uniform. This picturesque lighthouse has been illuminating the waters off the coast of Big Sur since 1889. Bones up to 12,000 years old have been discovered here, and many believe that the cavern is home to prehistoric paranormal activity.Ī door that leads to nowhere and a staircase that dead ends into the ceiling? It’s said that widow Sarah Winchester designed the house this peculiar way to confuse the ghosts: men killed by her late husband’s creation, the Winchester rifle. Named for the wailing sound air once made passing through the cave (prior to its eventual widening), this Calaveras County wonder is also a site for some of America’s most ancient remains.

While dishware shards and nails can be found on the streets, anyone who takes home a souvenir risks the curse of Bodie (and it’s also against park rules). More than 100 structures remain, as do the supposed spirits of prospectors. Spanning 500 acres in Mono County, about 75 miles southeast of Lake Tahoe, Bodie is a Gold Rush–era ghost town frozen in time. Open for tours year-round, the Amador County castle turns into a full-fledged haunted house come October. Once a reform school for unruly youth and abandoned children, the structure’s sinister history includes corporal punishment, toxic dunking baths, and a housekeeper’s murder. The castle’s foreboding facade looks straight out of a horror film.
#HOTEL CALIFORNIA YEAR WINDOWS#
The real draw, however, is the supposed ghost of a deceased commander who succumbed to malaria in 1897 and now stares out hospital windows as hikers stroll past. Overlooking a rugged bluff in Humboldt Bay, this former fort’s remote location in Humboldt County lends an eerie air. Listed from north to south, here are a handful of reportedly haunted houses, hotels, ocean liners, and more.įort Humboldt State Historic Park, Eureka Whether or not you believe in ghosts, a visit to these 10 spooky spots is sure to deliver a thrill. The forlorn spirit of a lovely young woman, a headless friar, a bevy of prehistoric phantoms: frightful sightings abound in these paranormal hotspots across California.
